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CHAPTER II—“IN MINE ENEMIES’ HOUSE”
 Sir Daniel’s residence in Shoreby was a tall, commodious, plastered mansion, framed in carven oak, and covered by a low-pitched roof of thatch.  To the back there stretched a garden, full of fruit-trees, alleys, and thick arbours, and overlooked from the far end by the tower of the abbey church.  
The house might contain, upon a pinch, the retinue of a greater person than Sir Daniel; but even now it was filled with hubbub.  The court rang with arms and horseshoe-iron; the kitchens roared with cookery like a bees’-hive; minstrels, and the players of instruments, and the cries of tumblers, sounded from the hall.  Sir Daniel, in his profusion, in the gaiety and gallantry of his establishment, rivalled with Lord Shoreby, and eclipsed Lord Risingham.
 
All guests were made welcome.  Minstrels, tumblers, players of chess, the sellers of relics, medicines, perfumes, and enchantments, and along with these every sort of priest, friar, or pilgrim, were made welcome to the lower table, and slept together in the ample lofts, or on the bare boards of the long dining-hall.
 
On the afternoon following the wreck of the Good Hope, the buttery, the kitchens, the stables, the covered cartshed that surrounded two sides of the court, were all crowded by idle people, partly belonging to Sir Daniel’s establishment, and attired in his livery of murrey and blue, partly nondescript strangers attracted to the town by greed, and received by the knight through policy, and because it was the fashion of the time.
 
The snow, which still fell without interruption, the extreme chill of the air, and the approach of night, combined to keep them under shelter.  Wine, ale, and money were all plentiful; many sprawled gambling in the straw of the barn, many were still drunken from the noontide meal.  To the eye of a modern it would have looked like the sack of a city; to the eye of a contemporary it was like any other rich and noble household at a festive season.
 
Two monks—a young and an old—had arrived late, and were now warming themselves at a bonfire in a corner of the shed.  A mixed crowd surrounded them—jugglers, mountebanks, and soldiers; and with these the elder of the two had soon engaged so brisk a conversation, and exchanged so many loud guffaws and country witticisms, that the group momentarily increased in number.
 
The younger companion, in whom the reader has already recognised Dick Shelton, sat from the first somewhat backward, and gradually drew himself away.  He listened, indeed, closely, but he opened not his mouth; and by the grave expression of his countenance, he made but little account of his companion’s pleasantries.
 
At last his eye, which travelled continually to and fro, and kept a guard upon all the entrances of the house, lit upon a little procession entering by the main gate and crossing the court in an oblique direction.  Two ladies, muffled in thick furs, led the way, and were followed by a pair of waiting-women and four stout men-at-arms.  The next moment they had disappeared within the house; and Dick, slipping through the crowd of loiterers in the shed, was already giving hot pursuit.
 
“The taller of these twain was Lady Brackley,” he thought; “and where Lady Brackley is, Joan will not be far.”
 
At the door of the house the four men-at-arms had ceased to follow, and the ladies were now mounting the stairway of polished oak, under no better escort than that of the two waiting-women.  Dick followed close behind.  It was already the dusk of the day; and in the house the darkness of the night had almost come.  On the stair-landings, torches flared in iron holders; down the long, tapestried corridors, a lamp burned by every door.  And where the door stood open, Dick could look in upon arras-covered walls and rush-bescattered floors, glowing in the light of the wood fires.
 
Two floors were passed, and at every landing the younger and shorter of the two ladies had looked back keenly at the monk.  He, keeping his eyes lowered, and affecting the demure manners that suited his disguise, had but seen her once, and was unaware that he had attracted her attention.  And now, on the third floor, the party separated, the younger lady continuing to ascend alone, the other, followed by the waiting-maids, descending the corridor to the right.
 
Dick mounted with a swift foot, and holding to the corner, thrust forth his head and followed the three women with his eyes.  Without turning or looking behind them, they continued to descend the corridor.
 
“It is right well,” thought Dick.  “Let me but know my Lady Brackley’s chamber, and it will go hard an I find not Dame Hatch upon an errand.”
 
And just then a hand was laid upon his shoulder, and, with a bound and a choked cry, he turned to grapple his assailant.
 
He was somewhat abashed to find, in the person whom he had so roughly seized, the short young lady in the furs.  She, on her part, was shocked and terrified beyond expression, and hung trembling in his grasp.
 
“Madam,” said Dick, releasing her, “I cry you a thousand pardons; but I have no eyes behind, and, by the mass, I could not tell ye were a maid.”
 
The girl continued to look at him, but, by this time, terror began to be succeeded by surprise, and surprise by suspicion.  Dick, who could read these changes on her face, became alarmed for his own safety in that hostile house.
 
“Fair maid,” he said, affecting easiness, “suffer me to kiss your hand, in token ye forgive my roughness, and I will even go.”
 
“Y’ are a strange monk, young sir,” returned the young lady, looking him both boldly and shrewdly in the face; “and now that my first astonishment hath somewhat passed away, I can spy the layman in each word you utter.  What do ye here?  Why are ye thus sacrilegiously tricked out?  Come ye in peace or war?  And why spy ye after Lady Brackley like a thief?”
 
“Madam,” quoth Dick, “of one thing I pray you to be very sure: I am no thief.  And even if I come here in war, as in some degree I do, I make no war upon fair maids, and I hereby entreat them to copy me so far, and to leave me be.  For, indeed, fair mistress, cry out—if such be your pleasure—cry but once, and say what ye have seen, and the poor gentleman before you is merely a dead man.  I cannot think ye would be cruel,” added Dick; and taking the girl’s hand gently in both of his, he looked at her with courteous admiration.
 
“Are ye, then, a spy—a Yorkist?” asked the maid.
 
“Madam,” he replied, “I am indeed a Yorkist, and, in some sort, a spy.  But that which bringeth me into this house, the same which will win for me the pity and interest of your kind heart, is neither of York nor Lancaster.  I will wholly put my life in your discretion.  I am a lover, and my name—”
 
But here the young lady clapped her hand suddenly upon Dick’s mouth, looked hastily up and down and east and west, and, seeing the coast clear, began to drag the young man, with great strength and vehemence, up-stairs.
 
“Hush!” she said, “and come!  Shalt talk hereafter.”
 
Somewhat bewildered, Dick suffered himself to be pulled up-stairs, bustled along a corridor, and thrust suddenly into a chamber, lit, like so many of the others, by a blazing log upon the hearth.
 
“Now,” said the young lady, forcing him down upon a stool, “sit ye there and attend my sovereign good pleasure.  I have life and death over you, and I will not scruple to abuse my power.  Look to yourself; y’ ’ave cruelly mauled my arm.  He knew not I was a maid, quoth he!  Had he known I was a maid, he had ta’en his belt to me, forsooth!”
 
And with these words, she whipped out of the room and left Dick gaping with wonder, and not very sure if he were dreaming or awake.
 
“Ta’en my belt to her!” he repeated.  “Ta’en my belt to her!”  And the recollection of that evening in the forest flowed back upon his mind, and he once more saw Matcham’s wincing body and beseeching eyes.
 
And then he was recalled to the dangers of the present.  In the next room he heard a stir, as of a person moving; then followed a sigh, which sounded strangely near; and then the rustle of skirts and tap of feet once more began.  As he stood hearkening, he saw the arras wave along the wall; there was the sound of a door being opened, the hangings divided, and, lamp in hand, Joanna Sedley entered the apartment.
 
She was attired in costly stuffs of deep and warm colours, such as befit the winter and the snow.  Upon her head, her hair had been gathered together and became her as a crown.  And she, who had seemed so little and so awkward in the attire of Matcham, was now tall like a young willow, and swam across the floor as though she scorned the drudgery of walking.
 
Without a start, without a tremor, she raised her lamp and looked at the young monk.
&n............
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